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Long Island Sound StudyConnecticut
Habitat
Nature’s NurserySalt MarSheS
Living Treasures
Page 8
Long Island Sound StudyConnecticut
a salt marsh serves many important roles in the Sound’s ecosystem: • Nursery• Filter• Sponge• Nutrient source
Living Treasures
Page 9
Long Island Sound StudyConnecticut
Mosquito ditches criss-cross the marsh; they were originally hand-dug to combat diseases carried by mosquitoes, which breed in pools of standing water.
Living Treasures
Page 10
Long Island Sound StudyConnecticut
Salt marshes have distinct zones of vegetation determined by elevation.Tall saltmarsh cordgrass grows along the water’s edge in the low marsh, which is regularly flooded by the tides; this grass tolerates changing water level, salt concentration, and temperature.
Living Treasures
Page 11
Long Island Sound StudyConnecticut
The high marsh is flooded only during storms or unusually high tides; saltmeadow cordgrass (l) and spikegrass (r) dominate this part of the marsh.
Living Treasures
Page 12
Long Island Sound StudyConnecticut
Salt pannes are small, “desert-like” depressions in the marsh, where soil salinity can reach levels that are almost twice that of full strength sea water.
Living Treasures
Page 13
Long Island Sound StudyConnecticut
Glasswort, a succulent plant, grows in the salt pannes, looking like a field of tiny, spineless cacti.
Living Treasures
Page 14
Long Island Sound StudyConnecticut
Sea lavender has delicate flowers and wiry stems, grows in salt pannes and low marsh.
Living Treasures
Page 15
Long Island Sound StudyConnecticut
Salt-marsh asters (l) and orach (r) grow among the grasses in the high marsh, adding color in spring and fall.
Living Treasures
Page 16
Long Island Sound StudyConnecticut
the uplands are a transition zone from marsh to forest, and are home to many shrubs and broad-leaved plants.
Living Treasures
Page 17
Long Island Sound StudyConnecticut
Common reed or Phragmites often grows in dense stands at the upland edge of disturbed marshes; the thick stems can reach 15 feet tall.
Living Treasures
Page 18
Long Island Sound StudyConnecticut
Sumac is a shrub that grows in the upland zone, providing food and shelter for birds.
Living Treasures
Page 19
Long Island Sound StudyConnecticut
Ribbed mussels grow along the edges of tidal creeks in salt marshes, providing food for terrestrial mammals and other organisms.
Living Treasures
Page 20
Long Island Sound StudyConnecticut
the longwrist hermit crab, carrying an empty snail shell on its back for protection, moves about in the shallows of the marsh and tidal flats.
Living Treasures
Page 21
Long Island Sound StudyConnecticut
Green crabs inhabit the Sound’s marshes, rocky areas and tidal flats; voracious eaters of bivalve shellfish, they also eat seaweed and worms.
Living Treasures
Page 22
Long Island Sound StudyConnecticut
tidal creeks and mosquito ditches winding through the salt marsh shelter small fish from most larger predators, while blue crabs forage for prey in these creeks.
Living Treasures
Page 23
Long Island Sound StudyConnecticut
Striped killifish and other minnows rely on camouflage coloration and swimming in schools to confuse their predators.
Living Treasures
Page 24
Long Island Sound StudyConnecticut
two sparrow species of special concern, the seaside sparrow (l) and the saltmarsh sharp-tailed sparrow (r), rely on larger patches of salt marsh in Long Island Sound as key habitat; they build their nests in the marsh grasses.
Living Treasures
Page 25
Long Island Sound StudyConnecticut
Egrets and herons are common sights along the salt marsh edge and shore, where they stand quietly in shallows waiting to spear fish; most are colonial tree nesters like this great egret.
a green heron watches and waits patiently for prey.
Living Treasures
Page 26
Long Island Sound StudyConnecticut
Osprey, or fish hawks, are a common sight around Long Island Sound, especially in eastern regions; they arrive in March to nest, mostly on manmade platforms which keep their nests out of the reach of predators.
Living Treasures
Page 27
Long Island Sound StudyConnecticut
Diamondback terrapins live in the Sound’s salt marshes, eating a mixture of plants and animals; locally, these reptiles were nearly hunted to extinction for their meat.